wstirling
New Member
It seems that on the East Coast around 1870 building big clinker boats stopped (big is in this case above 50’.) This corresponds with the transition of fashion and a builders desire to keep up with modern practices which saw lute sterns become counter sterns. I have just begun planking a clinker lute stern and it struck me that if it were a counter stern it would be jolly difficult to plank it clinker. Are there any existing vessels or pictures of clinker counter sterns?
(This does not apply in general to Scotland, where clinker building went on for longer with many types being double ended, or the West Country where clinker building lost favour earlier although double enders and transoms were popular. A lute stern is like a counter, but the counter is a transom-if you want to clarify this you can view one at cuttersandluggers.co.uk-I hope I am not contravening the forum’s rules in the interests of historical investigation.) I am doing a part time MA at Exeter University in Maritime History and my dissertation is focusing on the development in hull shape and rig in British vessels under 200T between 1750 and 1900. If anyone has thoughts about other interesting reasons for change, particularly the transition between clinker and carvel around the coast I would be very interested to read them.
(This does not apply in general to Scotland, where clinker building went on for longer with many types being double ended, or the West Country where clinker building lost favour earlier although double enders and transoms were popular. A lute stern is like a counter, but the counter is a transom-if you want to clarify this you can view one at cuttersandluggers.co.uk-I hope I am not contravening the forum’s rules in the interests of historical investigation.) I am doing a part time MA at Exeter University in Maritime History and my dissertation is focusing on the development in hull shape and rig in British vessels under 200T between 1750 and 1900. If anyone has thoughts about other interesting reasons for change, particularly the transition between clinker and carvel around the coast I would be very interested to read them.